Trump Will get Coronavirus Assessments Whereas Senators Wait

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Trump Will get Coronavirus Assessments Whereas Senators Wait

WASHINGTON — Dr. Brian P. Monahan, the tight-lipped physician who attends to Congress, despatched up on Thursday what some have construed as a warn


WASHINGTON — Dr. Brian P. Monahan, the tight-lipped physician who attends to Congress, despatched up on Thursday what some have construed as a warning: His workplace, he advised senior Republican officers on a personal convention name, can not display screen all 100 senators for the coronavirus once they return to work on Monday.

Two miles down Pennsylvania Avenue on the White Home, the story could be very completely different. President Trump and Vice President Mike Pence are examined continuously, aides who come into shut contact with them are examined weekly and the record of people that have to be examined every day retains increasing, in keeping with officers accustomed to the method.

And beyond whether people can be tested, there are questions about the tests available. At the White House, the medical unit is using a rapid-testing kit developed by Abbott Laboratories, which yields results in about five minutes. But Dr. Monahan told the Republican aides on Thursday that he lacked such equipment, and that it would take at least two days to get test results.

The disparity highlights the fundamental tension between the natural impulse to protect a president’s health and the desire by most politicians to project that they are not receiving any special treatment, Robert Dallek, the presidential historian, said in an interview Friday.

By flaunting his own access to tests and making false claims about the availability of testing, Mr. Trump, he said, was only hurting his own credibility with voters.

“When you add it to the fact that people on Capitol Hill, who after all form an essential part of the government as well, cannot get testing as readily, it just underscores the feeling that this man is principally self-serving,” Mr. Dallek said. “It is not a good impression for the White House to convey.”

His attitude is by the book: no symptoms, no test, which is in keeping with the C.D.C.’s guidelines for testing. In detailed guidance issued to lawmakers on Friday, Dr. Monahan advised that members of Congress wear masks or facial coverings when they cannot stand six feet apart from one another.

At the White House, Mr. Trump’s new press secretary, Kayleigh McEnany, reinforced the impression that administration officials were getting preferential treatment when she delivered her first news briefing on Friday — without a mask. She is among the group of senior officials tested weekly, as all assistants and deputy assistants to the president are, an official said on Friday. Aides who are lower in rank are tested based on how often they are in close proximity to Mr. Trump.

The White House medical unit, for its part, is keeping track of test schedules and results for each office in the complex. Both Mr. Trump and Mr. Pence have avoided masks in public in favor of stressing how many times they have tested negative for the virus. Visitors to the White House are also tested before they are allowed to be close to the president, including groups of business leaders and governors this week like John Bel Edwards of Louisiana.

“The governor and Alex Billioux, who is our assistant secretary of public health, both were tested for Covid-19 when they arrived and before they could go into the White House,” Christina Stephens, a spokeswoman for Mr. Edwards, said on Friday. “They also had their temperatures checked several times before entering the Oval Office.”

Reporters who have been traveling with Mr. Pence have undergone coronavirus testing and journalists traveling with Mr. Trump to Arizona next week have been advised that they will be tested before boarding Air Force One.

On Capitol Hill, even the party leaders are not getting that treatment.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California had not been tested as of Friday. Representative Kevin McCarthy of California, the top House Republican, has, but at the White House, where Mr. McCarthy attended an event with the president last week.

Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the Democratic leader, has not been tested; he takes his temperature several times a day and advises those he talks to do the same. Aides for Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, would not say whether he had been tested or not.

There are efforts to conserve at the White House. With so many aides reporting to work — and undergoing regular testing — the White House Management Office requests regularly that officials who are able to stay home should to adhere to social-distancing guidelines and to curb the number of tests being administered. Secret Service agents do not typically wear masks, but cleaning crew members do.

On Capitol Hill, the decisions have been left largely to Dr. Monahan, who has played a critical behind-the-scenes role throughout the pandemic in advising officials on how to stay safe. Under rules posted on his internal website and shared with The New York Times, lawmakers must exhibit symptoms, “have no alternative explanation for illness” and must have “a nexus to risk” to receive a test.

The tests are then sent off site to an unnamed “multistate national testing organization” for analysis — a multiday process.

“If the Capitol physician recommends that we not come back, then we have to take that guidance,” she said.

Mr. McConnell chose a very different course. He is bringing the Senate back into session on Monday amid a rising coronavirus caseload in the region. Mr. McConnell’s staff would not say whether the leader has spoken directly with Dr. Monahan.

On Friday afternoon, though, Mr. McConnell issued detailed guidelines to his colleagues based on Dr. Monahan’s recommendations, and thanked the doctor, along with other Senate officials, for working “hard to develop solutions so that the United States Senate can smartly and safely begin resuming our critical in-person work on Monday.”

In a memo Dr. Monahan circulated on Thursday, he offered advice for attending committee meetings. Wearing masks or face coverings was “strongly recommended” in situations where keeping six feet apart was not possible, he said, and he urged lawmakers to “use provided hand sanitizer” and “remain seated until the conclusion of the meeting, to the extent possible.”

“The face covering is likely to be most useful in preventing viral spread while a person is speaking,” the memo read.

Dr. Monahan, 60, is a quiet presence in the Capitol, where he oversees an office that functions as a full-service in-house medical clinic for those working in the Capitol complex, including in the Supreme Court. Dr. Monahan often accompanies House or Senate leaders on official delegation trips overseas, as the White House physician does with the president.

“He seems to be ubiquitous on Capitol Hill,” said Senator Chris Van Hollen, Democrat of Maryland, who lives down the street from Dr. Monahan in Kensington, Md., a suburb of Washington. “He really is everywhere and for us, he is always on duty. He’s 24/7.”

When Ms. Pelosi’s aides needed to figure out how to keep lawmakers safe while they passed a $2 trillion coronavirus relief package in March, Dr. Monahan worked with the sergeant-at-arms to come up with a plan for a “visual quorum,” a senior House Democratic aide said, in which lawmakers spaced themselves around the chamber and in the galleries above it.

Now, with senators about to come back to Washington, some are sounding nervous. Without sufficient diagnostic testing, they fear the Capitol — where senators are supported not only by their own aides but also a vast support staff of food service workers, custodians and other personnel — would become a mini hot spot for the virus.

In a letter to Mr. McConnell this week urging him to reconsider his decision to bring back the Senate, Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, who at 86 is the oldest senator, cited Dr. Monahan.

“The attending physician of Congress, Dr. Brian Monahan, advised House leadership that he recommends against resuming their session,” she wrote. “Speaker Pelosi and Majority Leader Hoyer did the right thing by heeding this public health advice and are setting the right example for the country.”



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